TICGL

| Economic Consulting Group

TICGL | Economic Consulting Group
Tanzania Food Inflation Report, Historical Trends (2021-2025) and 2026 Forecast
December 12, 2025  
National Consumer Price Index (NCPI) - Food & Non-Alcoholic Beverages Report Period: 2021-2025 (Historical) | 2026 (Forecast)Base Year: 2020 = 100Weight in Consumer Basket: 28.2%Date Prepared: December 2025 Lead Analyst: Amran Bhuzohera Tanzania’s food inflation landscape has undergone significant fluctuations over the past five years, shaped by global shocks, domestic supply constraints, and structural market inefficiencies. Between 2021 and […]
Tanzania Food Inflation: Five-Year Trends and 2026 Outlook

National Consumer Price Index (NCPI) - Food & Non-Alcoholic Beverages

Report Period: 2021-2025 (Historical) | 2026 (Forecast)
Base Year: 2020 = 100
Weight in Consumer Basket: 28.2%
Date Prepared: December 2025

Lead Analyst: Amran Bhuzohera


Tanzania’s food inflation landscape has undergone significant fluctuations over the past five years, shaped by global shocks, domestic supply constraints, and structural market inefficiencies. Between 2021 and 2025, food inflation averaged 5.2%, but the trend reveals pronounced volatility—rising from 3.7% in 2021 to a crisis peak of 7.3% in 2022, driven largely by fuel cost surges (energy inflation averaged 9.1% in 2022) and supply chain disruptions. Although 2024 marked a period of exceptional stability with food inflation dropping to 2.1%, households have since faced renewed pressure in 2025 as inflation accelerated sharply to an average of 6.0%. This rise reflects persistent cost-push factors, including elevated transport index levels that climbed from 103.34 (2021) to 121.50 (2025)—a cumulative increase of 17.6%, directly increasing food distribution expenses.

By November 2025, food inflation reached 6.6%, nearly double the national headline inflation of 3.4%, underscoring the disproportionate burden food prices impose on household purchasing power. Food prices have risen cumulatively by 31.5% since the 2020 base year, intensifying affordability challenges, particularly for low-income urban households and regions dependent on purchased food. Unprocessed and food crop categories—which are highly weather-sensitive—remain the most volatile, with swings as wide as 10.2 percentage points between June 2024 (-1.3%) and July 2025 (8.9%). This volatility reflects structural weaknesses such as low agricultural mechanization, post-harvest losses, long supply chains, and limited storage facilities.

Looking ahead, the 2026 forecast indicates continued upward pressure, with food inflation expected to average 7.1%, peaking at 8.5% in July, driven by seasonal supply shortages, lean-season stress, and higher input costs. Critical food categories such as food crops and unprocessed food are projected to hit peaks of 11.0% and 11.5%, respectively. With Tanzania’s population and urbanization steadily growing, combined with elevated energy and transport costs projected to rise to 6.5–8.0% in 2026, food price stability remains a central macroeconomic concern. Close monitoring and policy interventions—particularly in agricultural productivity, logistics, and market efficiency—will be essential to mitigate risks and sustain household welfare. Read More: Tanzania’s Inflation Path in 2025

Key Highlights

  • Food prices have risen cumulatively by 31.5% since 2020, significantly reducing household purchasing power and widening the gap between food inflation (6.6%) and overall inflation (3.4%) as of November 2025.
  • 2024 was the most stable year with only 2.1% food inflation, but this reversed sharply in 2025, where food inflation averaged ~6.0%, marking a 3.9 percentage-point surge from the previous year.
  • 2022 remains the crisis year, with food inflation peaking at 9.7%, unprocessed food at 12.7%, and food crops at 14.2%, driven by high fuel costs and supply chain disturbances.
  • Unprocessed and food crop categories remain the most volatile, showing swings of up to 10.2 percentage points between 2024 and 2025 due to climate variability, seasonal shortages, and production instability.
  • 2026 food inflation is forecasted to average 7.1%, with a seasonal high of 8.5% in July, reflecting continued pressure from input costs, transport inflation, and recurring supply-side constraints.

1. HISTORICAL ANALYSIS (2021-2025)

1.1 Five-Year Trend Overview

YearAverage Annual InflationStatusYear-on-Year Change
20213.7%Moderate/Baseline-
20227.3%Very High+3.6 pp
20236.8%High-0.5 pp
20242.1%Low/Stable-4.7 pp
2025 (Jan-Nov)~6.0%Rising+3.9 pp

Key Observation: The data reveals a cyclical pattern with a major spike in 2022, gradual decline through 2023-2024, and a sharp rebound in 2025.

1.2 Food Price Index Evolution

The table below shows how food prices have increased relative to the 2020 base year:

Month20212022202320242025
January100.60106.99117.57119.39125.77
March103.93110.64121.39123.05129.75
June106.46112.71121.49122.58131.53
September103.30111.89118.17121.17129.70
December105.90116.15118.83124.27-
Cumulative Increase+5.9%+16.2%+18.8%+24.3%+31.5% (Nov)

Analysis: Food prices have increased by 31.5% cumulatively since the 2020 base year, representing significant erosion of purchasing power for households.

1.3 Crisis Period Analysis - 2022

The year 2022 represented the peak of food inflation pressure:

CategoryPeak Inflation RateMonth Recorded
Food & Non-Alcoholic Beverages9.7%December 2022
Unprocessed Food12.7%December 2022
Food Crops & Related Items14.2%December 2022

Impact: The 2022 crisis saw double-digit inflation in key food categories, severely impacting household budgets and food security.

1.4 Recovery Period - 2023-2024

2023 - Gradual Stabilization:

  • Started at 9.7% (January) - carryover from 2022 crisis
  • Ended at 2.3% (December) - significant improvement
  • Annual average: 6.8%
  • Pattern: Steady monthly decline throughout the year

2024 - Exceptional Stability:

  • Annual average: 2.1% - the lowest in the five-year period
  • Monthly range: 0.9% (June) to 4.6% (December)
  • Food crops showed negative inflation (-0.4%) - actual price decreases
  • This period represented optimal conditions for food affordability

1.5 Current Situation - 2025

Monthly Inflation Rates - 2025:

JanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNov
5.3%5.0%5.4%5.3%5.6%7.3%7.6%7.7%7.0%7.4%6.6%

Key Characteristics:

  • Consistency: All months above 5% - no relief periods
  • Peak Period: June-August showing 7.3-7.7%
  • Acceleration: Sharp increase from 2024's 2.1% to current 6.0%
  • Pattern: Mid-year peaks align with seasonal agricultural cycles

2. CATEGORY BREAKDOWN ANALYSIS

2.1 Food Categories Performance

Category2022 Peak2023 Avg2024 Avg2025 (Nov)Volatility
Food & Non-Alcoholic Beverages9.7%6.8%2.1%6.6%High
Food Crops & Related Items14.2%11.3%-0.4%5.4%Very High
Unprocessed Food12.7%9.5%0.3%7.0%Very High
Processed Food (implied)~6-7%~5%~3%~6%Moderate

2.2 Most Volatile Components

Unprocessed Food - 2024-2025 Volatility:

PeriodInflation RateChange
June 2024-1.3%Price decreases
July 20258.9%Sharp spike
Total Swing10.2 percentage pointsExtreme volatility

Food Crops Index - Monthly Pattern:

Month20242025Difference
January0.7%-1.5%-2.2 pp
April0.8%-0.9%-1.7 pp
July-0.9%3.5%+4.4 pp
November-4.0%5.4%+9.4 pp

Insight: Food crops show extreme seasonal and year-to-year variations, making them the primary driver of overall food inflation volatility.

2.3 Comparison with Overall Inflation

MeasureFood InflationOverall (All Items) InflationGap
November 20256.6%3.4%+3.2 pp
2025 Average~6.0%~3.3%+2.7 pp

Critical Finding: Food inflation is running at nearly DOUBLE the overall inflation rate, indicating specific supply-side pressures in the food sector.


3. UNDERLYING FACTORS & CHALLENGES

3.1 Cost-Push Factors

Energy & Fuel Impact:

Year/PeriodEnergy & Fuel InflationImpact on Food
20229.1% annual averageHigh transport costs
20232.3% annual averageStabilizing
20249.3% annual averageRising pressure
2025 (Nov)3.8%Moderate pressure

Transport Costs:

Index Level20212022202320242025 (Nov)
Transport Index103.34109.63112.72117.42121.50
Year-on-Year Change-+6.1%+2.8%+4.2%+3.5%

Impact: Rising energy and transport costs directly increase food distribution expenses, passed on to consumers.

3.2 Supply-Side Challenges

Agricultural Production Instability:

  1. Climate Dependency: Sharp swings in unprocessed food prices correlate with seasonal rainfall patterns
  2. Post-Harvest Losses: Infrastructure gaps lead to wastage and supply constraints
  3. Input Costs: Fertilizer and seed prices remain elevated
  4. Technology Gap: Low mechanization affects productivity

Market Structure Issues:

  1. Long Supply Chains: Multiple intermediaries increase final prices
  2. Storage Deficits: Limited cold storage and warehousing
  3. Market Information: Price transparency gaps benefit middlemen
  4. Infrastructure: Poor rural roads increase transport costs

3.3 Demand-Side Factors

FactorImpact LevelDescription
Population GrowthMediumSteady demand increase 2-3% annually
UrbanizationMediumShift to purchased food vs subsistence
Income GrowthLow-MediumChanging consumption patterns
Dietary ChangesLowGradual shift to processed foods

4. IDENTIFIED PROBLEMS & RISKS

4.1 Current Critical Issues

ProblemEvidenceSeverityTrend
Persistent High Inflation6+ consecutive months above 6.5% in 2025HIGHWorsening
Extreme VolatilityUnprocessed food: -1.3% to +8.9% swingHIGHStable
Energy Cost PressureFuel inflation 3.5-7.9% rangeMEDIUMFluctuating
Food-Overall GapFood 6.6% vs Overall 3.4%MEDIUM-HIGHWidening
Seasonal VulnerabilityConsistent Jun-Aug peaksMEDIUMPredictable

5. 2026 FORECAST - DETAILED PROJECTIONS

5.1 Base Case Monthly Forecast - 2026

Detailed Monthly Projections:

MonthForecastRangeKey DriversRisk Level
January6.8%6.5-7.0%Post-holiday demand, carryover from 2025Medium
February6.2%5.8-6.5%Pre-harvest tightening, seasonal lowMedium
March6.5%6.2-6.8%Supply anticipation, input cost increasesMedium
April7.0%6.7-7.3%Lean season begins, stocks depletingMedium-High
May7.5%7.2-7.8%Peak lean season, pre-harvest price spikesMedium-High
June8.0%7.5-8.5%Supply tightening, early harvest delaysHigh
July8.5%8.0-9.0%ANNUAL PEAK - typical seasonal highHigh
August8.0%7.5-8.5%New harvest begins, gradual easingHigh
September7.2%6.8-7.5%Harvest supplies increase, prices moderateMedium-High
October6.8%6.5-7.2%Post-harvest stabilizationMedium
November6.5%6.2-6.8%Abundant supply, festival demandMedium
December6.8%6.5-7.2%Year-end demand, holiday effectsMedium

Quarterly Summary:

QuarterAveragePeakStatus
Q1 20266.5%6.8% (Jan)Moderate start
Q2 20267.5%8.0% (Jun)Rising pressure
Q3 20267.9%8.5% (Jul)CRITICAL PERIOD
Q4 20266.7%6.8% (Oct/Dec)Stabilizing
ANNUAL7.1%8.5% (Jul)Moderate-High

5.2 Category-Specific Forecasts

Food Categories - 2026 Projections:

CategoryAnnual AvgPeak MonthVolatilityKey Factors
Food & Non-Alcoholic Beverages7.1%8.5% (Jul)HighOverall basket driver
Food Crops8.5%11.0% (Jul)Very HighWeather dependency
Unprocessed Food9.0%11.5% (Jul-Aug)Very HighSeasonal production
Processed Food5.5%6.5% (Jun)ModerateInput cost driven
Restaurants/Accommodation4.5%5.0% (Dec)LowService component

Other Influential Categories:

Category2026 ForecastImpact on Food
Energy & Fuel6.5-8.0%High - transport costs
Transport4.0-5.0%High - distribution
Housing/Utilities4.5-5.5%Medium - overhead costs

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